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MUS 330: Conducting
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
This course is designed to provide the student with the fundamental skills of conducting and is geared primarily toward majors and minors who will conduct musical groups in schools and churches. Skills developed will include beat patterns, sight singing, ear training, score reading, and preparation. Students will be assigned a laboratory ensemble to conduct in rehearsal and performance. Graveline/ Three credits
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MUS 330 - Conducting
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MUS 400: Special Topics in Music
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
Special topics in Music are offered occasionally by the department. The courses respond to special interests evidenced by outgrowths of topics addressed in an intermediate course, or research interests of the faculty. These courses are sometimes interdisciplinary in nature and may be offered without prerequisites. Clemente, Corbin, Graveline, Lamothe, Staff/ Three credits
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MUS 400 - Special Topics in Music
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MUS 401: Music Theory III
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
Continuation of Music Theory II. A study of more advanced aspects of harmony (augmented sixth chords, the Neapolitan sixth chord, altered dominants, diminished seventh chords, chromatic third-relation harmony, modulation to foreign keys, ninth, 11th, and 13th chords), as well as the more complex formal structures of the common practice period in relation to harmony and tonality (sonata-allegro, rondo, and fugue). Clemente, Corbin, Graveline/ Three credits
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MUS 401 - Music Theory III
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PCS 400: Special Topics in Peace and Conflict Studies
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
OR
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PCS 400 - Special Topics in Peace and Conflict Studies
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PCS 401: Peace and Conflict Studies Internship
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
Samples of possible sites/organizations: Rwanda Reconciliation Center (with which Assumption has a close connection), Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Greenpeace, United for a Fair Economy (ngo in Boston), Pax Christi U.S.A., Pax Christi International, Agape Community, a local prison, a rape crisis center. Faculty sponsors will work with the organization and the student to determine the appropriateness of the site and the work involved. OR
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PCS 401 - Peace and Conflict Studies Internship
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PCS 402: Directed Individual Study
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
On appropriate topic, leading to substantial research paper For further information, contact Dr. David Siddle, Director of PCS (Human Services and Rehabilitation Studies) 508-767-7229, dsiddle@assumption.edu
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PCS 402 - Directed Individual Study
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PHI 200: Philosophy of Nature
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
The beginning of philosophy and natural science in the early Greek philosophers and the continuation of their thought in modern science. The seeds which developed into an understanding of change, and the kinds of cause found in the natural world. Staff/ Three credits
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PHI 200 - Philosophy of Nature
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PHI 201: Philosophical Psychology
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
The method of studying life in philosophical psychology and its place in the complete study of life with experimental psychology and biology. Main problems of the discipline and solutions offered by Greek and modern philosophers. Bauer, Flynn, Ranasinghe/ Three credits
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PHI 201 - Philosophical Psychology
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PHI 204: Go d and the Philosophers
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
An examination of the ways that philosophers have understood the divine. Topics may include arguments for the existence of God, critiques and defenses of classical theism, the appropriate language to speak of the divine, the problem of evil, the nature of religious experience, why miracles may be problematic, science and God. How does one’s understanding of the existence and character of the divine bear on one’s self-understanding and how one lives? Bauer, Carroll Keeley, Traylor/ Three credits
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PHI 204 - Go d and the Philosophers
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PHI 205-206: Fo undations:Philosophy and Religion
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
An introduction to the religious and philosophical foundations of the West. The purpose of the course is to help students discover the principles at the heart of Western civilization and thereby develop a critical approach to their own thoughts and actions through a study of the major thinkers who have formed our culture. (This course is taught as a two-semester sequence in PHI and THE. Students may take either or both semester(s) and receive three credits for each semester.) (Same as THE 205-206) Corrigan, LePain/ Three credits each semester
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PHI 205-206 - Fo undations:Philosophy and Religion
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